Have you ever regretted adding a mutual person on FB that you kind of wish wouldn't post on your wall or talk to you, since you were never really good friends in the first place? Awkward...

Wonder what the story behind that is... but no, not personally. I usually only add people on Facebook if I want them to see what's going on in my life, and if I likewise care about what's going on in theirs. I have three social medias. Facebook is for friends, Twitter is for me to creep on my favorite athletes, and get quick news in baseball, and Instagram is for everybody else, since I barely use it.

I think Facebook has privacy settings. Just set the person to acquaintance and anything you don't want that person to speak on, just set the privacy to said level. I don't know. Sounds annoying though.

Originally posted by "Rogue"

Do you have a favorite Shakespeare play?

I can't really say that I do. I like theater here and there, and I've acted in a play, but I can't say I'm really all that into Shakespeare. If I had to choose one, I guess I'd choose Macbeth, but that's if I had to choose one.

Now for my question... ever have an ex who texted you out of nowhere, just to say that they believe your life is more fulfilling than theirs? Happened to me and it was just really odd.

Kind of funny but I think outside of Disney movies, the Super Mario Bros show was probably the first cartoon I ever saw as a kid. I remember Captain Planet too (which I hated even then haha). But my first real big phase and love was Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Then after that it was the infamous 90's Batman that still holds up today. Then it was Power Rangers, then DBZ...

Johnny Quest, Transformers, Beast Wars are a few good honorable mentions. I'm also glad I grew up when Looney Tunes and the classics were still on all the time and saw a lot of that, as well as Scooby Doo.

TMNT really holds a special place in my heart though. It's either that or Batman.

I definitely miss hand-drawn 2D. It's classic. And CG, while constantly improving, doesn't always look that great over time. I mean, just rewatching some scenes from "Toy Story."

Anyway, I feel like if it's not Pixar it takes a lot for me to gain interest when it comes to these CG features. Also, it seems like these things are so heavily pushed toward little kids (Trolls, Smurfs, etc.)

Shakespeare play: I've always been fond of Macbeth, partially because Hecate's monologue got me the highest praise from my theater teacher, and also because I just really like seeing hubris fall.

My happy place changes depending on my mood. Usually, it is some kind of comfy chair with coffee and either a good book or video game, and a sleeping kitty or two. Though as of late, truly comfy chairs are hard to find.

I have a few, but it also depends since several obscure movies I love are known within groups I hang out with.

One that usually no one knows is "Stiff Upper Lips," a parody of all those Ivory Merchant movies out there ("Room With a View," "Passage to India," etc.) I love this gag that's in there about the family making this guy carry around a chunk of their lawn in a crate on his back, and then when they want to have tea, he has to open the crate and lay out the lawn. It's a joke I frequently think about and reference whenever we go to tea.

What's a show that you used to watch as a kid that no one else seems to remember?

I didn't have cable as a kid, so I pretty much watched whatever network put on in the '90s on magical Saturday morning. Fox, probably. I volleyed between lots of channels.

After school, though, depending on the year I was either very loyal to Fox (for "X-Men," "The Tick," and "Where on Earth is Carmen Sandiego," ABC (particularly when they had 1 Saturday morning with all the Disney shows, "Recess," "Pepperann," etc) or WB, which had "Tiny Toon Adventures" and "Animaniacs."

I was always a PBS kid, though. It was all about "Ghostwriter," "Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?," "Bill Nye the Science Guy," and eventually "The Magic School Bus" and "Arthur."

That's what I've watched this year so far. I loved Ex Machina and Interstellar. Spectre was better than expected but I'm in the minority that doesn't love Daniel Craig (love Skyfall though). Maggie was pretty bad outside of seeing Arnold do a more dramatic role. Alien Covenant was dog dook. Contact was cool. Rogue One is forgettable.